This Thread is about how a person who had a stroke in May 2021 is experiencing life AFTER the stroke. My Ups and Downs.

 

 Has anyone had radiation treatment in Australia over the last couple of years please?

 

Husband has just been given the costing and it doesn't make any sense.

Medicare pays $20,000

If you have to have radiation treatment you are expected to pay a further $620,00 a week for five weeks.

Even if you are on a Part Pension or Pension!

 

 

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Alarming outbreak of children's hepatitis may have been brought on by Covid lockdown weakening immunity, health chiefs say, as two more children need liver transplants in UK and dozens are sick

Deadly outbreak of children's hepatitis may have been brought on by lockdown weakening

UK health officials said the global outbreak in cases may be as a result of pandemic measures which prevented children in their 'formative' years being exposed to common infections. In total, 114 cases of 'acute hepatitis of unknown origin' have been reported in the UK in the last four weeks, with ten youngsters undergoing critical liver transplant procedures. The first cases were spotted in Scotland less than a month ago, prompting a warning from UK health officials who have detected as many cases in three months as they would expect to see in a year. The majority of cases have been spotted in under-5s who were initially hit with diarrhoea and nausea before later getting jaundice - the yellowing of the skin/eyes. Other symptoms can include dark urine, grey-coloured faeces, itchy skin, muscle pain, a fever, lethargy, loss of appetite and stomach pains. Investigations are ongoing but officials believe the illness may be triggered by an adenovirus, a viral infection which is usually to blame for the sniffles, and has been linked to three-quarters of all cases. Experts say lockdowns - which prompted concerns for children's physical and mental health - may have weakened the immunity of children and left them more susceptible to the virus, or the offending pathogen may have mutated to pose a greater threat.

 

Ally Langdon rips into Scott Morrison over rising cost of living as inflation soars to a 21-year high: PM blames Covid and war in Europe amid looming mortgage rate spike

 

NEW Today host Ally Langdon (left) ripped into Scott Morrison (right) over rising inflation as the Prime Minister blamed Covid-19 and war in Europe for the latest figure. Australia's inflation hit 5.1 per cent - the fastest pace in 21 years - sparking fears interest rates could rise less than three weeks before the May 21 election. Mr Morrison said inflation was higher in other rich countries and claimed Australians will not blame him for the rising prices.

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures showed petrol prices soared by 11 per cent, with Russia's Ukraine invasion hurting crude oil supplies. Fuel prices have risen for the seventh straight quarter, marking the strongest annual rise since 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait, sparking the first Gulf War (pictured is a motorist in Sydney filling up)              

Australian Bureau of Statistics figures showed petrol prices soared by 11 per cent, with Russia's Ukraine invasion hurting crude oil supplies. Fuel prices have risen for the seventh straight quarter, marking the strongest annual rise since 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait, sparking the first Gulf War (pictured is a motorist in Sydney filling up)

 

[I would love to see the price of petrol lower and interest rates a lot higher please]

 

Yes the price of housing in Western Australia has gone so high it is cruel to those that want their own home.

Those that are buying property are using Bank funds with low interest and then turning around and renting them for high rents.

I hope they hurt when the interest rates go higher.

I loved the days when I was getting 18%  on my little savings in the Building Society, it was great as I was bringing up two teenagers and I could afford to buy them things I couldn't earlier in the year.

Yes higher interest rates please!

 

 'Stop treating all us older ladies like we need protecting!' After Harry’s comments about the Queen, ELISABETH LUARD, 80, says it’s part of a patronising trend she abhors

Last week that Prince Harry took it upon himself to ‘protect’ his grandmother Elisabeth Luard says just because HM is 96 it doesn't mean she's not in chargeUK-based writer, 80, says that like Queen she is not done yet and can make decisions for herself

By ELISABETH LUARD FOR THE DAILY MAIL

PUBLISHED: 07:03 AEST, 28 April 2022 | UPDATED: 07:03 AEST, 28 April 2022

The first time it happened, I’d tripped on a concrete step and had to go to A&E to have a gash sewn up. It was my eldest son Caspar, then 50, who spoke on behalf of all three of my children. 

‘You have to move house, Mother,’ he said. ‘We’ve talked about it between ourselves... sooner or later you’ll fall downstairs and get eaten by the cat.’ 

That’s when it struck me: my children, all in their middle years with teenagers of their own, had decided their mother was a problem that merited discussion behind her back. I’d reached an age — 75 — that meant I could no longer be trusted to make my own decisions. From now on, they knew better. 

I recalled my bitter indignation when I read last week that Prince Harry had taken it upon himself to ‘protect’ his grandmother from the wrong sort of advisers. He said of his recent tea with the Queen: ‘I’m just making sure she’s protected and got the right people around her.’ 

  

Last week Prince Harry said his grandmother needed protecting from the wrong sort of advisers. He said of his recent tea with the Queen: ‘I’m just making sure she’s protected and got the right people around her.' Harry is pictured here with the Queen

Well, thanks Harry — but just because HM, aged 96 and in the year of her Platinum Jubilee, is sometimes obliged to use a walking stick, doesn’t mean she’s not in charge of who she is and what she does. 

It seems to me (at 80 and still counting) there’s an assumption that the elderly can’t answer for themselves. 

 Her Majesty, if recent reports are true, has all the marbles she needs to make up her own mind. She’s unlikely to relish a reminder of what happens to us all sooner or later, rich or poor, as we lose the ability to do the things we always did. I imagine the Queen is far from amused, particularly given that young Harry is hardly the best person to offer advice on sensitive subjects. 

I call this kind of patronising behaviour the ‘Does she take sugar?’ problem. By which I refer to the common scenario when a waiter in a cafe addresses an older person’s companion, rather than the older person themselves. The tacit assumption being that physical vulnerability necessarily translates into mental decline. 

 I share the monarch’s view: ‘I’m not done yet'

Some of us may not be as ablebodied as we were, but this doesn’t mean we don’t know if we take sugar in our tea. 

In the same way, Harry seems to be assuming that now the Queen is well into her 90s, she can no longer be trusted to choose her own people. He’s 37, for heaven’s sake — he should have learnt his lesson by now. 

I have experience of old ladies with firm opinions. My mother was of the same generation as the monarch and did exactly as she wanted all her life. She never hid her disapproval of the choices I, her eldest daughter, had made. Wrong husband (unreliable), too many children (in too quick succession), career as a food writer (how did that happen?). 

I never dared challenge my mother’s disapproval, so we never even agreed to disagree. My mother disliked confrontation face to face (though her letters filled me with dread) and made sure it didn’t happen. Perhaps this is why I became a writer — a way of claiming a voice. 

Elisabeth Luard, 80, says that no matter what age people should be allowed to make their own decisions. She points out that Harry seems to be assuming that the Queen, who is well into her 90s, can no longer be trusted to choose her own people  

Elisabeth Luard, 80, says that no matter what age people should be allowed to make their own decisions. She points out that Harry seems to be assuming that the Queen, who is well into her 90s, can no longer be trusted to choose her own people

So when my own children were young but well able to speak for themselves, I tried to make sure they too had a voice. 

‘What’s his name?’ asked wellmeaning strangers, presuming my son couldn’t speak for himself. And I’d immediately readdress the question to him. ‘What’s your name?’ I would ask him. 

It expressed exactly what I then felt and still do — that everyone, however young or old, should be allowed to speak for themselves. 

Which made it doubly surprising when, shortly after my 75th birthday, my children — the very same ones I’d always encouraged to speak for themselves — attempted to remove that right from me. 

They staged what they called ‘an intervention’. A polite word for ganging up on someone and telling them what to do. 

That’s when they decided it would be better for me to move from my beloved rambling farmhouse in the wilds of Wales to be closer to them: ‘We’ll find somewhere much safer and closer to London. Hastings or Eastbourne, somewhere the grandchildren can visit.’ 

Really? All five of my London-based grandchildren had been coming to stay for the holidays throughout their lives. 

‘We know it’s expensive mending the roof and hard work pumping the water out of the cellar,’ my son continued, his two sisters nodding along. ‘And we won’t be able to help enough to make a difference.’ Of course it was well intentioned, coming from a place of loving care — but at the same time rather thoughtless. (In the same way Harry clearly can’t see the cringeworthy crassness of his bold — public, no less — declaration that he’s looking out for his dear old granny.)

I had no intention of leaving the beautiful place that had been my home for more than 20 years. Certainly not until I was good and ready. 

 Everyone, however young or old, should be allowed to speak for themselves

My mother — let alone the monarch — wouldn’t have stood for such treatment. And neither did I. My brain was still in full working order, thank you very much; I’d let them know when it wasn’t. 

In the end it was three years before I decided, independently, that the time had come to move. I didn’t move to Hastings or Eastbourne, ‘safer’ though that might have been, but as close as I could get to central London, the city where I was born. 

These days, I live in a studio flat in a factory conversion in Acton, which suits me fine. And I share the monarch’s view of a suitable age for retirement: ‘Thanks for asking, but I’m not done yet.’ 

There will be times when I will need help. And in London postlockdown I’m learning to accept help when it’s offered. A seat on the bus, a helping hand to bridge the gap between platform and train on the Tube, a kindly heave of a loaded shopping trolley. 

Her Majesty has already downsized — or so it seems — making Windsor Castle her main residence and choosing to stay at the modest Wood Farm during visits to the Sandringham estate — and she’s unlikely to need a seat on the bus. So what useful help might the monarch accept from the next generation? 

Perhaps an offer of company when walking the corgis in the unmown end of the garden. If it were me, best of all would be an unconditional offer from California to send the little ones, Archie and Lilibet (suitably accompanied by Nanny, of course), for a few days with their great-granny without the pressure of parents or politics. 

 Harry is hardly the best person to offer advice

Her Majesty is far older and wiser than her grandson. With age comes tolerance, if we care enough to take the good with the bad. And Queen Elizabeth II has certainly had enough practice in forgiving — though possibly not forgetting — to move a loving relationship with her grandson back on track. 

Family loyalty is, after all, Her Majesty’s stock-in-trade. 

It’ll be no surprise if the California runaways are seen waving from the palace balcony in June. Harry is her grandson and there’s often an unspoken alliance between older and younger — the problem generations that squeeze the middle. 

I hope they do work it out. We can all of us change our friends (advisers too). But we can never change our family. 

Well-meaning ‘advice’ and all.

 

 

Dr Karl explains what's causing Australia's staggering rainfalls and warns it's not going to stop anytime soonDr Karl Kruszelnicki explained why Australia is experiencing huge rainfalls  He said the La Nina weather pattern was working with other climate systems  The beloved science presenter also added the rain could be around for months  

By BRETT LACKEY FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

PUBLISHED: 12:10 AEST, 1 May 2022 | UPDATED: 18:05 AEST, 1 May 202

After torrential rain and flooding caused widespread havoc over swathes of Australia this summer, the wet weather looks stubbornly set to stick around.

Dr Karl Kruszelnicki explained that La Nina is working together with other weather systems to create the perfect conditions for heavy rainfall, which could continue until at least late June.

Already this year, many towns and cities along the country's east coast have reached their annual rainfall, including Sydney, which by early April had seen at least 1112mm of rain.

The average annual rainfall in Sydney is 1164mm, and there is still nine months of the year left go.

The deluge also caused devastating flooding in northern NSW.

Lismore was particularly hard hit with the entire town submerged and hundreds of homes severely damaged after the Wilsons River broke its bank and reached a peak of about 15metres twice in a month.

Bureau of Meteorology data from the last 13 La Nina events showing where has got the most rainfall. The NSW coast has historically been drier than inland but not in 2022       

Bureau of Meteorology data from the last 13 La Nina events showing where has got the most rainfall. The NSW coast has historically been drier than inland but not in 2022

Sydney weather: What's causing staggering rainfalls | Daily Mail Online

 

 

There is always someone worse off.

 

The twins are joined from the chest to the pelvis, sharing a bladder, bowel and a fused leg - but are currently being prepared for surgery to separate them        

The twins are joined from the chest to the pelvis, sharing a bladder, bowel and a fused leg - but are currently being prepared for surgery to separate them 

Parents welcome 'miracle' conjoined twins into world after one-in-2.5million pregnancy | Daily Mail Online

The extent of the conjoining was unknown but thankfully the twins have individual hearts meaning they can be separated surgically

 

 

 

 

 

'A lot has changed in the last six months - but I'm very much loved': British TV escapologist Jonathan Goodwin shares first picture of himself in a wheelchair after fireball stunt left him paralysed for life - as fiancée Amanda Abbington posts snapAmerica's Got Talent's Jonathan Goodwin shares first picture of himself in a wheelchair

America's Got Talent star Jonathan Goodwin has shared the first picture of himself in a wheelchair - after his fiancée Amanda Abbington revealed he has been left paralysed for life after a fireball stunt went wrong.  The Brit, 42, who was in hospital for four months as a result and only came home in February accompanied the Instagram image of himself and his dog, with a positive post which read: 'Six months ago I went to rehearse something and left this little hairy monkey waiting patiently for me… 'He didn't see his dad again until just a couple of weeks ago and when he finally did, dad had new cool wheels

my two great fears going blind and/or ending up in a nursing home unable to communicate etc some nurses care, a lot don't ( including the owners of said places ( I used to work in them ) 

To all the wonderful Moms out there....

19 Free Mother's Day Cards and Ideas for Small Homemade Gifts.

 

The 'yellow brick road' to Atlantis? Deep-sea researchers spot incredible rock formation while exploring the Pacific Ocean floor near HawaiiThe yellow brick road to Atlantis? Incredible rock formation spotted on ocean floor near

It may look similar to the yellow brick road in The Wizard of Oz, or perhaps a hidden path to the mythical lost city of Atlantis. But deep-sea researchers who spotted the incredible rock formation say it is actually an example of ancient active volcanic geology on the ocean floor near Hawaii. The strange-looking feature, which also resembles a road paved in cobblestones, was located in the Lili?uokalani Ridge in the Papah?naumokuakea Marine National Monument in the Pacific Ocean.

How electrical appliance found in nearly EVERY Australian household left a two-year-old boy fighting for life and bandaged from head to toeTwo year old Elijah Whitton is in a coma after he was severely burnt in a house fire in

Elijah Whitton (left), 2, was airlifted 566km to the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne after a blaze destroyed his family home on the border of Victoria and NSW. Emergency services were called to the Ruby street property in Wentworth at 3:22pm on May 1 after a fire, believed to be sparked by a tumble dryer, engulfed the home. The toddler is in an induced coma (right) and is scheduled for a third round of skin grafting surgery on Thursday. His family have started a fundraising page for the boy's ongoing medical bills and future rehabilitation costs.

 

 

When I first watched this I thought it was a little cat being resquied!

Dramatic moment hero clings to the outside of a window 80ft up a tower block to save girl, three, after spotting her hanging from the eighth-floor in Kazakhstan

 

Sabit Shontakbaev (inset), 37, was on his way to work with a friend when he saw a crowd below staring up at the three-year-old. Her mother had gone shopping and left her home alone in Kazakhstan's capital Nur-Sultan when she piled up her toys and cushions to climb out of the window. Sabit, a father-of-four, immediately rushed upstairs in a bid save her before she fell to her death. He ran inside the block and went up to the seventh floor, to the flat immediately below where the girl was precariously hanging on. He climbed out of the window below the terrified girl who by then had been holding on for 15 minutes.

Sabit Shontakbaev clings to the outside of a tower block window to rescue a young girl after spotting her dangling from the eighth floor               Sabit Shontakbaev clings to the outside of a tower block window to rescue a young girl after spotting her dangling from the eighth floor      

Sabit Shontakbaev clings to the outside of a tower block window to rescue a young girl after spotting her dangling from the eighth floor

[stories like this makes the brain work over and think, which before the stroke it was taken for granted, I guess most of you would take this for granted too.  ]

oops!

Horror moment truck misses a head-on crash by seconds after a caravan FLIPPED on a country road

A driver with a caravan has narrowly avoided a devastating crash with a truck in recent dashcam footage posted online. The car driver was travelling with a caravan on a country road in Inverleigh, Victoria. It gradually drifts into an oncoming lane, with a truck just managing to avoid the car (right) by driving on the side of the road. The caravan then flips over (left) as the car clumsily pulls back into the correct lane.

Poor little boy!


How an Aussie toddler lost his THUMB on an escalator at a busy shopping centre - as his family relive the horrific moment his tendon was slashedA toddler has severed his thumb in a horror incident involving an escalatorLouis Fairchild was on an escalator when a piece of metal sliced his thumb offHis mother rushed him to hospital where doctors operated on the boy for hoursAnora Fairchild is now calling on shopping centres to inspect escalators closely 

A toddler has completely severed his right thumb in a horror incident on a shopping centre escalator.

Louis Fairchild was with his mother Anora travelling up an escalator at Broadway shopping centre in inner Sydney on Saturday when the accident unfolded.

The young boy was holding onto the rail of the escalator when a sharp piece of metal protruding from underneath the hand rail reportedly sliced off his thumb.

Louis was rushed to Sydney Children's Hospital and operated upon. The procedure took several hours, according to his mother.

The medical staff were unable to save the toddler's thumb. 

Louis is currently at home recovering from the ordeal, with further surgical procedures a possibility.

Anora is now calling on shopping centres to inspect their escalator hand rails closely.

'My family has suffered an unspeakable amount of heartache. Lewis will likely live the rest of his life without using his right thumb,' she said. 

'We could not have ever imagined a quick trip to our local shopping centre would be our worst nightmare that we can't wake up from.' 

Management at Broadway shopping centre are investigating the incident.

Lawyers representing the centre are in discussions with the family's solicitor.   

Daily Mail Australia has approached Broadway Sydney for comment.

The young boy was holding onto the rail of the escalator when a sharp piece of metal protruding from underneath the hand rail (pictured) reportedly sliced off his thumb       

The young boy was holding onto the rail of the escalator when a sharp piece of metal protruding from underneath the hand rail (pictured) reportedly sliced off his thumb

 

 

 

 

New plan to RESTRICT over the counter sales of paracetamol in a bid to stop overdoes in Australia

The TGA is investigating whether making paracetamol less available in Australia would help to counter accidental and deliberate overdoses in adults and children.

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